TY - JOUR
T1 - How should the center lead China's reforestation efforts? - Policy making games between central and local governments
AU - Yu, Xueying
AU - Wang, Hongxia
PY - 2013
Y1 - 2013
N2 - Over the past ten years, China has implemented one of the largest reforestation projects in the developing world. However, the reforestation efficiency has been seriously compromised by the conflicts between the central and local governments in implementing policy. While the central government tries to maximize the project's ecological benefits, the local tends to minimize its administrative efforts due to limited budgets. This paper creates a Stackelberg model to simulate central and local relationships and proposes three possible solutions: penalizing high mortality rates of trees, rewarding high survival rates, and a combination of them. It is shown that the ecologically optimal strategy for the central government is to recognize high survival rates with a reward rate quantitatively equal to the size of the reward base fund. Understanding and solving the conflicts between central and local governments in China's ecological projects is particularly important since its rising economy is being drained of natural resources, while exploiting other countries' resources. Contrary to traditional wisdom that takes local agencies for granted as subordinate organs in the environmental governance system, this work indicates that environmental policy design needs improved mechanisms to motivate local agencies in working more effectively.
AB - Over the past ten years, China has implemented one of the largest reforestation projects in the developing world. However, the reforestation efficiency has been seriously compromised by the conflicts between the central and local governments in implementing policy. While the central government tries to maximize the project's ecological benefits, the local tends to minimize its administrative efforts due to limited budgets. This paper creates a Stackelberg model to simulate central and local relationships and proposes three possible solutions: penalizing high mortality rates of trees, rewarding high survival rates, and a combination of them. It is shown that the ecologically optimal strategy for the central government is to recognize high survival rates with a reward rate quantitatively equal to the size of the reward base fund. Understanding and solving the conflicts between central and local governments in China's ecological projects is particularly important since its rising economy is being drained of natural resources, while exploiting other countries' resources. Contrary to traditional wisdom that takes local agencies for granted as subordinate organs in the environmental governance system, this work indicates that environmental policy design needs improved mechanisms to motivate local agencies in working more effectively.
KW - Central local conflicts
KW - Forestry management
KW - Natural resource governance
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84887127211&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.resconrec.2013.09.001
DO - 10.1016/j.resconrec.2013.09.001
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84887127211
SN - 0921-3449
VL - 80
SP - 64
EP - 84
JO - Resources, Conservation and Recycling
JF - Resources, Conservation and Recycling
IS - 1
ER -